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Tuks cricket team still unbeaten in the USSA Tournament

Tuks' cricket team, which has been this university's best performing sports code for the past few years, still carries the flag and they are doing great so far at the USSA tournament in Cape Town.

Tuks’s cricket team made sure they are off to a good start in defending their crown as USSA Champions by beating Wits by 59 runs and Maties by six wickets.

On Tuesday in Durbanville, Cape Town, Maties batted first. From the third over, things started going wrong for Maties. Matthew Boast got the wicket of Khayehile Sithole. By the ninth over, Maties was with their back against the wall, scoring 29/3. Tuks’s bowlers never relented. It led to Maties being bowled out for 99 runs in 37 overs.

Kundai Matigima was brilliant for the second consecutive day, taking 4/31. Against Wits, he took 3/38. Merrick Brett was also impressive, finishing with figures of 3/22. Boast took 2/9 in seven overs.

Wisani Mushwana scored Tuks’ winning runs in the 26th over, hitting a four. Tuks ended up with 100/4. Raees Salie top-scored for Tuks with an unbeaten 37 runs from 63 balls (5×4, 1×6).

Keagan Lion-Cachet is a member of a well-known sports family and several members of this family have already reached great heights on the sports field.
Keagan Lion-Cachet

On Monday, Keagan Lion-Cachet was outstanding for Tuks against Wits, scoring 93 runs from 99 balls (10×4, 1×6). The game was in the balance when the third-year education student went to bat. At the time, Tuks was on 66/3. Cachet was involved in two significant partnerships that swung the game. He and Raees Salie put on a 44-run partnership for the fourth wicket. Then Cachet and Aphiwe Yako were involved in a 120-run fifth-wicket partnership. Yako scored 64 runs from 57 balls (9×4).

Their heroics led to Wits needing to score 284 runs in 50 overs. Wits was bowled out for 225 in the 48th over. Kundai Matigima (3/38) and Nathan Ngugi (3/33) bowled brilliantly. Lion-Cachet took three catches as wicketkeeper. He did the same today in the game against Maties.

Lion-Cachet credits his success to Tuks’ coach, Kruger van Wyk.

“As far as I am concerned Coach Kruger is one of the best, if not the best, in South Africa. He is a stickler who believes that to excel, one must master the basics first and not allow for bad habits,” he remarked after the game.

Excelling in sports comes naturally for the Lion-Cachet’s. Aunt Susan was in the 1970s a South African javelin throwing champion and national record holder. Keagan’s dad, Allan, was unlucky to miss out on representing South Africa as a sailor at the Olympic Games.

 

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